Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 20 September 1952 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Yellow Jackets Defeat Garrett In First Home Game Os Season, 21-6

Decatur’s Yellow Jackets, ‘ romp-: Ing to three touchdowns in thethird quarter, overcame a sik-point half-time deficit to whip thp Gar-; rett Railroaders, 21-6, in Depatuy’s home opener at Worthman fl<Hd’ Friday nfght. ’• 1 ! t The victory, a Northeastern InI ' diana conference tilt, was DefcatuW first; triumph of the. s.easofi after a loss to Auburn and a tie with Bluffton. For Garrett, it wias the' second loss after an opening game win Over Portland. j k The Railroaders tallied their only touchdown mfflway through the second quarter on a freak play.; The Jackets apparently had 'Leach, stopped on the Decatur 35 but ; Leach flipped the ball, to 1 Weimer, who broke away jo his s left and raced for the TD. jAn tempted placement for extra, point was low. * ' , ' ■ ? The Jackets, who had * twite missed opportunities to scornin' the second quarter, came back wfth a vengeance in the third peiiiod: Taking the kickoff, on their own 34-yaijd line, the Jackets put together three first [downs in a row {o the Garrett 10, i and personal foul on the Railroaders oh the last play took the - , to the one, from inhere Jim Rowley t crdcked the line for the tying'touchdown. Rowley also plunged for.the extra point'and Decatur had a ,7 4 6 lead. . I s Garrett fumbled the ensuing kickoff* and Phil Krick recovered fyir ’ the Jackets dn the Garrett 351 Gene Morrison flipped a sport puss to Ferris Kohne, Who ran to tne Garrett 10 before he was downed; Rowley smashed for four yards and Gene VettCr then raced aroujnd his \ OWn left for the Roger Blackburn ran for extra point. I' > I !; A smashing tackles; by | Lisle Knittie paved the way for the : final of the game; Knittie cracked into the ball Harrier, ; who fumbled, with Knittle recovering on the Garrett 30. then broke awajy around left end |to the Garrett 6. The Jackets, were penalised 15 yards for offensive holding, but Vetter came right) back on the aasMrplay and raced |the 21 yards for the score. Rowley; again plunged for the extra point. I The Yellow Jackets far outhainejd the Railroaders, piling up 15t yards to: only five for the Railroaded. ' , Garrett racked up only one first down in the entire second half.,' that' one op a forward pass in the; final minute of the game. The Jackets will be at| home again next Friday night; entertaining the ; Portland Panthers :at Worthman field. | I i , Decatur LE —Kohne Byanski LT —Conrad Livergood LG—Roop , iSucfah, C—Thomhs , Smith RG —Knittje Carrol \ RT—Brokaw « Easterd'ay RE —Ditto Lantz QB —Morrison Lea,eh LH —Callow Bowmar RH —Pollock Gordon FB —Rowley Weimer Score by quarters: Garrettu— 0 6 0 o—j 6 Decatur 0 0 21 0— ; 21 Garrett :| scoring: Touchdown— Weimer. /•' Decatur scoring: Touchdowns — Vetter 2. Pointi after toticpdown —Rowley 2 (p'luhges) Blackburn (plunge). * 1 Garrett substitutions—L. ILantz, ■ GettsPßeed, D. Smith, Diehli Decatur substitutions — :Engle, Lawson, Blackburn, Vetter, I Lobsi- . ger, Krick, Hilyard, Hutker, Custer. Officials; — Lieberum, KeKenzie, Bonham.

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MAJOR NATIONAL; LEAGUE '.r - \ V W L Ptef. G.B. Brooklyn _,X-—‘ 92 54 1.630 kew York 88 !,sg. .603 4 ■St. Louis 85 61 .682 7 Philadelphia $1 65 .555 11 Chicago L.. . 73 76; 1.490 20% Cincinnati $5 82l .442 27% Boston . 63'>83 .432 29 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. G.B. New York 88 5$ .603 Cleveland __d_l.<B7 60 .592 1% Chicago |7 65 .527 11 Philadelphia ... “|7 71 .520 12 Boston 74 72 .507 14 Washington 75 73 -507 14 St. Louis 59 86 .407 28% Detroit 49 9.7 .336 39 s YEST|ERDAY’S results J National League i Brooklyn 4* Boston 2. ■ > Bt. Ix>uis 5, Chicago 3. , Philadelphia 1. New York 0. - Cincinnati 4. Pittsburgh 3/ \ ( American League i Philadelphia 2. New York 0. ; ; Cleveland 4» Detroit i. ; Washington $; 3. Only games hcheduled. > ! High School Football J Auburn 20, Bluffton 13. Warsaw 7, New Haven 6. 1 Columbia City 13, Fort Wayne j Concordia 7- I J '• ; Michigan City 13, Fort Wayne I North 0. J J « :■ \ Fort Wayne Central Catholic J 19, New Castle 7. 1 Wabash 25, Huntington 13. / Peru 13, Hartford City 0. Royerton 3£, Portland 0. ' A Valparaiso ’ 20, Rensselaer 6. '"Lafayette 25, Frankfort 0, KokomO 32, Marion 7. | Mishawaka 42. Elkhart 0. ? Hammond Tech’ 13; Muncie Central 6. Plymouth 13,; Rochester 0. j, West Lafayette ■ 32,J Logans- ; port 7.-. i ; . » Richmond 66, Andehloh 13. .< j : ■ 4 - ■ -J. L ; Democrat Want Ada Bring Resulta 'j; - • J T L ' ~

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Milwaukee Brewers Take Lead In Series KANSAS CITY, Mo. UP — Milwaukee's Brewers today were only one game away from the American Association title, with a three and two count against Kansas- City, in their best-out-of seven playoff series. | A 19-hit attack against five Kansas City pitchers Friday night gave the Brewers a 12 to 1 victory, .another win tonqht by: Milwaukee would end the title College Football Southern California 35, Washington State 7. Alabama 20, Mississippi Southern 6- , ; j’ i Mississippi ■54, Memphis 'lstate 6. | jJ ■ YOUTH IS (Coatiaw*d From Pag* OiW) told Richardson to drop the'gun. He did. Police recovered the money, in bundles of S2O to 3100 bills,- and returned it to the bank. ji No Trace Found SOUTH BEND, Ind. UP -J The FBI today reported no trace, has been, found of three gunmen who robbed the National Bank and Trust Co. of $52,954.91 Friday and vanished after wounding a bank clerk.i Hours the holdup—the f first of two in Indiana within three hours which netted robbers nearly SIOO,OO0 —a car believed to be the one in which’ the bandits fled was found abandoned near the city. It was a green sedan stolen three days ago in Gary, police said. ! Clerk George Lorence, 25, remained in fair condition in a hospital. His left arm was shattered by a blast from a sawed-off shotgun fired .when he ignored a bandit’s command and ran sos- help. PUBLICATION (Continued From Page One) churches. Other members of the planning committee are the Rev. Dwight 'NfcCurdy, Ralph Kenworthy, and |Arthur, Beeler. 1 i Trade to a Good Town —Decatm

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Dodgers Boost j Lead; Yankees Downed By A's By UNITED DRESS Jovial Jimmy Dykes, the little boss of the 'Athletics, said today“nothing would give me greater pleasure than to knock the Yankees out lof the pennant, and. it giving out with our best every (Ja? will do it, that’s what will gap“Don’t get me wrong," he siid. “I’m not faking any sides in this; pennant race. Whatever my per-! sonal sentiments might be don’t matter. Besides, as far as my team is concerned the big stake is tmrd. place and it looks as if we’ve Apt a swell chance to make that. But we gave out with the best we had. when we played' Cleveland ind, we’ll do the all the the way with the Vankees. That’s: the only fafr way to do it. , j "And win or lose,, those birds: are gonna know they were iri a; battle." The fighting pilot, whose Ath-! letics bowled over the Yankees 2 to 0 Frkjay night behind the superb pitching Os the-\magical mite, Bobby Shantz, battled so milch that he didn't even get to sep his ■ southpaw ace Wind up with his| 24th victory of the year, his; fifth shutout, his fourth- victory joyer the Yankees, and extend his string of scoreless innings in Yankee Sta dium to 29. ' i ;| ' Dykes was heaved out of the game for protesting ball-and-strike decisions by plate umpire Bill Grieve. Yankee manager , Casey Stengel also had protested and Dykes roared out | complaining Grieve was trying to evein up.; The Yankee defeat, coupled With Cleveland’s 4 to 1 triumph qver the Tigers, reduced New Yofk’s first place margin to gabies with eight Ibft for the Yankees to play and seven for the Indians. In the National league* thejiGiants suffered perhaps thbir hardest blow yet, when they were shut out 1 to 0 by Curt Simmons of jthe Phils after the Dodgers edged ;the Braves 4 to 2 in a rain-shortehed eight-inning game at Boston. That put the New Yorkers four |ull games behind with eight games left for egch team to play. | k In other National league games, the Cardsj beat the /Cubs wpen manager Eddie Stanky cracked a bases loaded single for the big rnn in the nipth in a 5 to 3 victory, while the Reds edged Pittsburgh 4 to 3 on Hermari Wehmeier’s fivehittpr. In the onljy other American; league game, thp Senators topped the Red Sox 5 to 3 with a four-run rally in the fifth featuring Mickey: bases-loaded double. !; The White Sox and prowns had ;an open date. T ' '4 r V k IKE DEFENDS 1 (Caati* l *** From Page ment,” Nixon’s statement skid, i "The facts will show not one red cent was spent by me for*lny personal use.” ,\ r ‘ Eisenhower's support of his young running mate was generally accepted as laying to rest any idea Nixon might he dropped from ithe ticket, i k •‘ : ■ Pilotless Bombers Under Development j WASHINGTON, UP — The Air Force has under development two new pilotless bombers, the No|t4> rop XB-62 Snark and the Bell XB-63 Rascal, American Aviation Daily* reported today. These new guided missiles Were; designed from the start as robot bombers unlike the Gruman E6E Hellcats now being used as “missiles” in Korea, the trade publjca--tion said. - — ; 1950 ' li MERCURY :' • ■ • r 4-Door, Radio ; Heater, Overdrive Dick Mansfield MOTOR SALES | 222 N. 3rd St. Decatur H ' 'A Get Year FREE BOOK j1 “How to .Watch | FOOTBALL” u. . ' . 1 / Written by 11 Famous ■' > Coaches j . - Also in- ? eludes 1952 College t and Professional Foot- < ball Schedules. STOP IN AND GET YOUR ■ BOOK TODAY 1 Knipp Service Corner 2nd & Jaekson Sts. ■.

c ’ H 1 N A | i . THAILAND ' f a < ASF- — -TKaL/////WPhnom P»nh Ini UE WEfkirvZfe//ATII 111 hJL Uft I (ggSggHi AaiAS HRO »v ■ IAAUNKTI AAUNKT FORCES M|= ' • \ FHIH STATES In French-controlled i Indo-Chipa whose applications for UN membership are before the Security Council are Laos, Viet Nam 'and Cambodia. Russia proposes merhbershlp of Viet Minh, which ithe Communists argue has independent status. The Viet Minh rebels, supported from Red China, been warring against constituted government for several years ! . -J V'■'■' , ' Hugo Bezdek Dies After Heart Attack : k ; -*V JI ■■ >1 ': \ . J ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. UP — Hugo Bezdek, the Czech immigrant who [invented football’s spinner play and weilt on to coaching fame at Penn State college, died in Atlantic City Hospital Friday night, less than 20 hours after he suffered a heart attack at his Ventnqr, N.J., homeL . _l , NEW LEAD From Page O—> ination of T. Lamar Caudle, a onetimfe Clark aide who was fired as the government’s chief prosecutor of tax frauds last year. After completing his second day on the witness stand| Friday, be was excused until Tuesday. i The drawling, 49-year-old Wadesboro,: N; C.,1 attorney told the investigators that Sens, parley M. Kilgore Va.i and William Langer t>- 4®d Rep. Robert L. Dougnlon A D-N. C- approached him on behalf of delinquent taxpayers facing prosecution, <. . h —n- ' J’ Charge Is Dismissed In City Court Here A charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor was disImissed against Edward Olalde, Jis) Berne, who Was involved in a runaway marriage with Louise J. Schwartz, 14, also of Berne, on August 1. The charges were dismissed when Mayor John Doan ruled he had no jurisdiction over the case since!the couple are still married, aside from the fact that an annulment proceeding is pending in Adams circuit court. • > Mayor Doan said there was no evidence of any ftirce in the marriage and they are still legally married. I |■

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Gary Emerson First MaW Upset Victim • INDIANAPOLIS. UP—Gary Rm- ! arson today was the first major gpset victim, of Indiana’s 1952 high o fkfhool football campaign. ijr’ity rival Wallace stopped the Steel City Tornadoes,'beaten only 1A the NIHSC playoffs last year, 14 to 12, in the last 9 1 0 seconds. A ifeyard pass, from Richard Lasky t© Dan Alvarez who also kicked the game-winning extra, point©, knocked Emerson from the loop Rast . Chicago Roosevelt and Gary Froebiel, with one league wiii each, became the pace-setters. Roosevelt edged Hammond In a noh-loop game 7. to 6. In the east NIHSC, Michigap CRy and La Porte joined South Bend Riley as front-runners with 24) records. Michigan City blanked Fort Wayne North, 13 to 0, and La Porte shaded South Bend NiHSG t© 20. . J'La ’P'ortq’s SlicerA scored twied in thef first 1 two of play oh long runs by ace halfback Buck kyjßlaag, led 21 to 6 at the end of the first period. Jim Levandoski’s three extra points made the d^ r ference. Richmond’s \ted-hot Red Devilp kept lip front in the North Centtajl conference title chase by humiliating, previously unbeaten Anderson, 6<]lt4 13, for their 15th straight tHiimph. Halfback George Peters, Whose brother,: Jimmy, was the state’s top scorer last year; Tommy Fletcher and Lamarr Lundy each scored twice in the rout. in other NCC tilt, L&Yayette Jeff whipped Frankfort 25-0 and Kokomo beat Marlon 32 to 7. — Plan For Spraying Os Soybean Fields As remedy for weedy soy beans, aviator Frank Qray of th© Bring-, bam airport at Portland, was called op by L. E. Archbold, county agricultural agent, to spray many acres of beans with "early frOßt.” Archbold reports the job will be done on a contract basis and sees thie aerial spraying as she most efficient way of killihg off tpe weeds and enabling growers to get . them in much earlier than was anticipated. She home field for the spraying operations will be the airport owned and operated by Josephine Ivhticb, at the south city liimts on U.fS. Highway i7. Miss IveticH reports the field is being used quite often by both sprayers and private planes who pass this area. The field, says Miss Ivetich, is Used by planes as a connecting point with Bhirne, as that city has no flying facilities of its own. i '' Plan Columbus Day Observance Oct. 15 ; The annual Columbus Day observance of the Knights of Columbus will be held October 15, it was announced today. John Logan, past district deputy iof the Knights of Columbus. Fort Wav ne, qrilt ‘be the speaker. The program is being arranged and will be. announced next week, William Lose, Jr., grand knight, said todaj).

' ’ ‘ '4 ' / s y '-WCT I wBpw 3 / 'fc*- TI I 9 • <ll ’ k . xiAJI i t Li’' HE WILL CAMPAIGN for General Eisenhower in any, state the GOP presidential nominee wants him to. but as yet no request has come, Wisconsin's controversial Senator Joseph McCarthy tells reporters at New York’s LaGuardia field.! (International Soundphoto) 1

*■"■ r sitko's Daughter Stricken By Polio Deborah Sitko, two-year old daughter of Mr. aid Mrs. Emil “Red" Sitko of'Fort Wayne, Is one of four new . victims of polio. The child was stricken tills week. Her father Is a former Notre Dame football star. , - Ji . '• ~ i . Accident Injuries Are Fatal To Youth LAFAYETTE, Ind. UP — Charles R. Nehemiah. 19, Attica, died Friday in St. Elizabeth hospital of injuries suffered prtiep an auto and a truck collided in Ind. 25 near West Point Sept. 13. Forest Fire Rages In National Forest IDAHO SPRINGS, Colo. UP — A force of 275 men today battled a forest fire that raged throned the Arapahoe National Forest about 20 miles south, of herej J ' The fire-fighting squad hoped io bring the \ blaze under control with the aid of bulldozers. ; ,v j v 4_—A__ .[ V If you liave something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It; brings results.

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1952

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